Ever wondered where Bristol City rank against other clubs in Britain when it comes to revenue and wages?

Football Finance expert @KieranMaguire has released numerous charts showing where British clubs rank against each other.

Perhaps the three most telling charts, would be the ones that look at the top 50 British clubs ranked by: revenue, revenue excluding television money and wages – and Bristol City feature in all three of them.

The first table looks at the top 50 clubs by revenue. It’s important to highlight that all of these statistics are from 2017, unless it has been stated otherwise in the chart.

As expected, the top six spots in Britain are taken up by the Premier League’s ‘Big Six’:

Manchester United £581.2m

Manchester City £500.5m

Arsenal £424.0m

Liverpool £364.2m

Chelsea £361.3m

Spurs £306.1m

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Looking at the Championship – unsurprisingly - the top spots are occupied by clubs that would have been in the Premier League at the time, so would have received sizeable revenue from the Premier League television deal. Their overall rankings are shown in brackets.

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Manchester City experienced the biggest loss out of the ‘Big Six’ once you removed TV income from their revenue (£211.6m), with Liverpool seeing the smallest change, with a loss of £154.2M

In the Championship, Stoke City moved up from second to first, but their recently relegated colleagues didn’t favour so well. Interestingly, after only seeing revenue decline by £7.6m when removing TV income, Leeds United zoomed up the table to second in the Championship rankings.

Stoke City (14th) £27.3m

Leeds United (15th) £26.5m

Aston Villa (17th) £25.8m

Hull City (19th) £23.0m

Ashton Gate (Image: Rogan/JMP)

Norwich City (20th) £22.9m

Elsewhere in the Championship:

8. West Brom (24th) £19.2m

9. Swansea City (25th) £18.4m

12. Bristol City (30th) £14.4m

In the previous chart, Bristol City were impressively ahead of Nottingham Forest.

But in this set of statistics they have gone one better, by even finding themselves ahead of a number of Premier League Clubs in the rankings. Watford (£14.3m), Bournemouth (£12.3m), Huddersfield (£8.3m) and Cardiff City (£7.1m) are all behind the West Country side once you remove TV income, which is a positive sign for City supporters.

The final chart looks at where the clubs in Britain rank for wages.

Again, the top spots are occupied by the Premier League big-hitters, although Arsenal and Chelsea do swap places.

Manchester United £295.9m

Manchester City £259.6m

Chelsea £219.7m

Liverpool £207.5m

Arsenal £199.4m

Spurs £126.9m

In the Championship, the recently relegated Premier League sides take up the top three spots once more. Again it is worth noting that these statistics will have almost definitely decreased since these 2017 figures, with the tighter budgets in the Championship meaning that many of their players will have been offloaded.

Swansea City (12th) £98.7m

Stoke City (14th) £84.9m

West Brom (16th) £79.1m

Middlesbrough (19th) £64.9m

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These figures will have almost definitely changed, but from what we can see, Leeds United - near the top of the Championship League table this season – are doing especially well considering they’re spending considerably less than many of their rivals.

On the whole, Bristol City are about average in comparison to the rest of the Championship and are in the top 40 in each chart. There are some sizable clubs that are below City, which is very impressive from a Reds point-of-view.

On the whole, however, the Manchester Clubs reign supreme in Britain, which is hardly surprising given their global reach and well-documented spending power.